Interview with Professor McFarlan
Global Business Summit Faculty Chair
Andrew J. Wylie (NI),Associate Editor
Issue date: 10/20/08 Section: News
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Dean Jay Light gave Professor McFarlan the responsibility of Global Business Summit Faculty Chair two years ago and ceded complete authority for creating the vision and implementing the details. "This was the ultimate event of the Centennial Celebration. To forge debate and have insight into what lay ahead of us for the next 50 years." The professor, along with 50 of his faculty colleagues developed three central themes for the summit: leadership, globalization and the future of market capitalism. Given recent events, "there couldn't have been a more relevant topic in October 2008."
The summit was an alumni event from inception, although current students were given the opportunity to participate via a 100-ticket lottery and event simulcast on campus. In a perfect world, more inclusion was possible but the students did have a designated event in April. The summit was eminently important for the research done at Harvard Business School. For those that could not attend, every single session was recorded and archived and the bulk that was video recorded will be available on the web. All the content is or will be completely accessible to the community.
The guest list looks like a who's who of global business leaders. Indeed, world leaders in general. CEOs, government officials and household names like Bill Gates all came to the summit. "Harvard has a terrific convening power. The summit was shown on television in India, where it was also on the front page of newspapers. Charlie rose ran a session on his program. Over life, you collect favors from people like marbles in a bowl. There's no point in keeping all those marbles." As for the number of attendees: "We've never run a logistical thing like this before (at HBS). Burden has the largest capacity at one thousand people." Those planning the event knew the summit would be massively oversold - in the end facilities for two thousand people were needed, thus the city-like pavilion in front of Baker Library.
Spring Break

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